Showing posts with label Opal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opal. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Various Artists - Remembering 1968 - A Tribute To Pink Floyd

1968 was a pivotal year for Pink Floyd. Syd Barrett had become increasingly unpredictable during the band's 1967 tour, and by the end of the year the band had added guitarist David Gilmour as the fifth member. Gilmour already knew Barrett, having studied with him at Cambridge Tech in the early 1960's, and the two had performed at lunchtimes together with guitars and harmonicas, and later hitch-hiked and busked their way around the south of France. In January 1968, Blackhill Enterprises announced Gilmour as the band's newest member, intending to continue with Barrett as a non-performing songwriter. The plan was that Barrett would write additional hit singles to follow up 'Arnold Layne' and 'See Emily Play', but in a pique of frustration at the situation he instead introduced 'Have You Got It Yet?' to the band, intentionally changing the structure on each performance so as to make the song impossible to follow and learn. Working with Barrett eventually proved too difficult, and matters came to a conclusion in January, while en route to a performance in Southampton, when a band member asked if they should collect Barrett, and according to Gilmour, the answer was "Nah, let's not bother", signalling the end of Barrett's tenure with Pink Floyd. After Barrett's departure, the burden of lyrical composition and creative direction fell mostly on Roger Waters, and while playing on the university circuit, they avoided Barrett songs in favour of Waters' and Richard Wright's material such as 'It Would Be So Nice' and 'Careful with That Axe, Eugene'. In 1968, Pink Floyd returned to Abbey Road Studios to record their second album, 'A Saucerful Of Secrets', which included Barrett's final contribution to their discography with his 'Jugband Blues' closing the record. Waters began to develop his own songwriting, contributing 'Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun', 'Let There Be More Light' and 'Corporal Clegg', while Wright composed 'See-Saw' and 'Remember A Day'. Released in June 1968, the album featured a psychedelic cover designed by Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey Powell of Hipgnosis, and it peaked at number 9, spending 11 weeks on the UK album chart. In December of that year, they released 'Point Me At The Sky' as a single, but it was no more successful than the two singles they had released since 'See Emily Play', with neither 1967's 'Apples And Oranges' or 1968's 'It Would Be So Nice' making any impression on the charts, while Barrett's 'Scream Thy Last Scream' was abandoned completely as a single after recording finished in January 1968. Despite the moderate success of the album, it paved the way for a change in direction, from the psychedelic pop of 'See Emily Play', 'Arnold Layne', and the 'Piper At The Gates Of Dawn' album into a much darker, more cosmic entity, with spacey tracks like 'Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun' foreshadowing what was to come from them in the next few years. Because this was a transitional time for the band, the music that they produced in 1968 has been picked apart by numerous bands over the years, and covered on albums, single b-sides and tribute albums, and so I've collected the best of them as an alternate overview of a significant year in the life of Pink Floyd. 



Track listing

01 Remember A Day - Crystal Jacqueline And The Honey Pot
02 It Would Be So Nice - Captain Sensible
03 Let There Be More Light - Flying Circus
04 Careful With That Axe, Eugene - Vespero
05 Point Me At The Sky - Mandra Gora Lightshow Society
06 Julia Dream - Us And Them
07 Corporal Clegg - Samarin, Morgan And Hull Llp
08 Scream Thy Last Scream - The Green Telescopes
09 Jugband Blues (If The Sun Don't Shine) - Opal
10 Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun - Psychic TV

Friday, November 5, 2021

Opal - Early Recordings Vol. 2 - (1991)

I'm a big fan of the Paisley Underground genre of the early 80's, as you might have gathered by my posts from The Dream Syndicate, but there were others bands that were just as good, most notably The Rain Parade, Green On Red, The Three O'Clock, and even The Bangles, and in this case Clay Allison. Clay Allison was an offshoot band composed of David Roback and Will Glenn of The Rain Parade, Kendra Smith of The Dream Syndicate, Sylvia Juncosa of The Leaving Trains, and Keith Mitchell of Monitor, and they released one single before changing their name to Opal and releasing some of their old recordings on the 1984 'Fell From The Sun' and 1985 'Northern Line' EPs. In 1987 they issued their only album 'Happy Nightmare Baby', but Smith left the group during the Happy Nightmare tour after a show in Providence, Rhode Island, and so Roback continued with vocalist Hope Sandoval, playing shows as Opal and planning an album to be titled 'Ghost Highway'. In 1989 they decided on a name change and became Mazzy Star, and 'Ghost Highway' was presumably released as their debut album 'She Hangs Brightly' in 1990. In 1989 the 'Early Recordings' album was released, collecting some songs from their EPs, a couple of Clay Allison tracks and some previously unreleased recordings. It showed what a great band they were, and what a shame it was that they didn't stay together longer. As further proof of this, here's a second volume of early recordings, mixing some songs from a 1984 promo sampler by Clay Allison with some great unheard tracks by an early Opal. Kendra Smith released a number of solo singles, EPs, and one album before retiring to the woods of northern California, and David Roback died in Los Angeles on February 24 2020 from metastatic cancer, at the age of just 61. 



Track listing

01 My Canyon Memory
02 Sisters Of Mercy
03 Sailing Boats
04 Vespers
05 Lisa's Funeral
06 This Town
07 Freight Train
08 Wintertime
09 Little Bit Of Rain
10 What You've Done
11 Cherry Jam
12 Indian Summer